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Dive into the research topics where Belén Calles is active.

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Featured researches published by Belén Calles.


BMC Microbiology | 2011

pBAM1: an all-synthetic genetic tool for analysis and construction of complex bacterial phenotypes

Esteban Martínez-García; Belén Calles; Miguel Arévalo-Rodrı́guez; Víctor de Lorenzo

BackgroundSince publication in 1977 of plasmid pBR322, many breakthroughs in Biology have depended on increasingly sophisticated vector platforms for analysis and engineering of given bacterial strains. Although restriction sites impose a certain format in the procedures for assembling cloned genes, every attempt thus far to standardize vector architecture and nomenclature has ended up in failure. While this state of affairs may still be tolerable for traditional one-at-a-time studies of single genes, the onset of systems and synthetic biology calls for a simplification -along with an optimization- of the currently unwieldy pool of genetic tools.ResultsThe functional DNA sequences present in the natural bacterial transposon Tn5 have been methodically edited and refactored for the production of a multi-purpose genetic tool named pBAM1, which allows a range of manipulations in the genome of Gram-negative bacteria. This all-synthetic construct enhances the power of mini-transposon vectors for either de-construction or re-construction of phenotypes á la carte by incorporating features inspired in systems engineering: modularity, re-usability, minimization, and compatibility with other genetic tools. pBAM1 bears an streamlined, restriction site-freed and narrow-host range replication frame bearing the sequences of R6K oriV, oriT and an ampicillin resistance marker. These go along with a business module that contains a host-independent and hyperactive transposition platform for in vivo or in vitro insertion of desired DNA into the genome of the target bacterium. All functional sequences were standardized for a straightforward replacement by equivalent counterparts, if required. pBAM1 can be delivered into recipient cells by either mating or electroporation, producing transposon insertion frequencies of 1.8 × 10-3 and 1.02 × 10-7, respectively in the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida. Analyses of the resulting clones revealed a 100% of unique transposition events and virtually no-cointegration of the donor plasmid within the target genome.ConclusionsThis work reports the design and performance of an all-synthetic mini-transposon vector. The power of the new system for both identification of new functions or for the construction of desired phenotypes is shown in a genetic survey of hyper-expressed proteins and regulatory elements that influence the expression of the σ54-dependent Pu promoter of P. putida.


Molecular Cell | 1997

Transcription Activation or Repression by Phage Φ29 Protein p4 Depends on the Strength of the RNA Polymerase–Promoter Interactions

María Monsalve; Belén Calles; Mario Mencía; Margarita Salas; Fernando Rojo

Phage psi 29 protein p4 activates the late A3 promoter and represses the early A2c promoter, in both cases by binding upstream from RNA polymerase (RNAP) and interacting with the C-terminal domain of the RNAP alpha subunit. To investigate how this interaction leads to activation at PA3 and to repression at PA2c, mutant promoters were constructed. We show that the position of protein p4 relative to that of RNAP, which is different at each promoter, does not dictate the outcome of the interaction. Rather, in the absence of a-35 consensus box for sigma A-RNAP activation was observed, while in its presence repression occurred. The results support the view that stabilization of RNAP at the promoter over a threshold level leads to repression.


Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Regulatory exaptation of the catabolite repression protein (Crp)-cAMP system in Pseudomonas putida.

Paola Milanesio; Alejandro Arce-Rodríguez; Amalia Muñoz; Belén Calles; Víctor de Lorenzo

The genome of the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida KT2440 encodes singular orthologues of genes crp (encoding the catabolite repression protein, Crp) and cyaA (adenylate cyclase) of Escherichia coli. The levels of cAMP formed by P. putida cells were below detection with a Dictyostelium biosensor in vivo. The cyaA(P. putida) gene was transcribed in vivo but failed to complement the lack of maltose consumption of a cyaA mutant of E. coli, thereby indicating that cyaA(P. putida) was poorly translated or rendered non-functional in the heterologous host. Yet, generation of cAMP by CyaA(P. putida) could be verified by expressing the cyaA(P. putida) gene in a hypersensitive E. coli strain. On the other hand, the crp(P. putida) gene restored the metabolic capacities of an equivalent crp mutant of E. coli, but not in a double crp/cyaA strain, suggesting that the ability to regulate such functions required cAMP. In order to clarify the breadth of the Crp/cAMP system in P. putida, crp and cyaA mutants were generated and passed through a battery of phenotypic tests for recognition of gross metabolic properties and stress-endurance abilities. These assays revealed that the loss of each gene led in most (but not all) cases to the same phenotypic behaviour, indicating a concerted functionality. Unexpectedly, none of the mutations affected the panel of carbon compounds that can be used by P. putida as growth substrates, the mutants being impaired only in the use of various dipeptides as N sources. Furthermore, the lack of crp or cyaA had little influence on the gross growth fingerprinting of the cells. The poor physiological profile of the Crp-cAMP system of P. putida when compared with E. coli exposes a case of regulatory exaptation, i.e. the process through which a property evolved for a particular function is co-opted for a new use.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

The φ29 transcriptional regulator contacts the nucleoid protein p6 to organize a repression complex

Belén Calles; Margarita Salas; Fernando Rojo

The nucleoid protein p6 of Bacillus subtilis phage φ29 binds to DNA, recognizing a structural feature rather than a specific sequence. Upon binding to the viral DNA ends, p6 generates an extended nucleoprotein complex that activates the initiation of φ29 DNA replication. Protein p6 also participates in transcription regulation, repressing the early C2 promoter and assisting the viral regulatory protein p4 in controlling the switch from early to late transcription. Proteins p6 and p4 bind cooperatively to an ∼200 bp DNA region located between the late A3 and the early A2c promoters, generating an extended nucleoprotein complex that helps to repress the early A2c promoter and to activate the late A3 promoter. We show that stable assembly of this complex requires interaction between protein p6 and the C‐terminus of protein p4. Therefore, at this DNA region, stable polymerization of protein p6 relies on p4‐specified signals in addition to the structural features of the DNA. Protein p4 would define the phase and boundaries of the p6–DNA complex.


Environmental Microbiology | 2012

The Crp regulator of Pseudomonas putida: evidence of an unusually high affinity for its physiological effector, cAMP

Alejandro Arce-Rodríguez; Gonzalo Durante-Rodríguez; Raúl Platero; Tino Krell; Belén Calles; Víctor de Lorenzo

Although the genome of Pseudomonas putida KT2440 encodes an orthologue of the crp gene of Escherichia coli (encoding the cAMP receptor protein), the regulatory scope of this factor seems to be predominantly co-opted in this bacterium for controlling non-metabolic functions. In order to investigate the reasons for such a functional divergence in otherwise nearly identical proteins, the Crp regulator of P. putida (Crp(P. putida)) was purified to apparent homogeneity and subject to a battery of in vitro assays aimed at determining its principal physicochemical properties. Analytical ultracentrifugation indicated effector-free Crp(P. putida) to be a dimer in solution that undergoes a significant change in its hydrodynamic shape in the presence of cAMP. Such a conformational transition was confirmed by limited proteolysis of the protein in the absence or presence of the inducer. Thermodynamic parameters calculated by isothermal titration calorimetry revealed a tight cAMP-Crp(P. putida) association with an apparent K(D) of 22.5 ± 2.8 nM, i.e. much greater affinity than that reported for the E. colis counterpart. The regulator also bound cGMP, but with a K(D) = 2.6 ± 0.3 µM. An in vitro transcription system was then set up with purified P. putidas RNA polymerase for examining the preservation of the correct protein-protein architecture that makes Crp to activate target promoters. These results, along with cognate gel retardation assays indicated that all basic features of the reference Crp(E. coli) protein are kept in the P. putidas counterpart, albeit operating under a different set of parameters, the extraordinarily high affinity for cAMP being the most noticeable.


Environmental Microbiology | 2016

The RNA chaperone Hfq enables the environmental stress tolerance super-phenotype of Pseudomonas putida.

Alejandro Arce-Rodríguez; Belén Calles; Pablo I. Nikel; Víctor de Lorenzo

The natural physiological regime of the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida involves incessant exposure to endogenous metabolic conflicts and environmental physicochemical insults. Yet, the role of assisted small RNA-mRNA pairing in the stress tolerance super-phenotype that is the trademark of this bacterium has not been accredited. We have thoroughly explored the physiological consequences -in particular those related to exogenous stress - of deleting the hfq gene of P. putida, which encodes the major RNA chaperone that promotes sRNA-target mRNA interactions. While the overall trend was a general weakening of every robustness descriptor of the Δhfq strain, growth parameters and production of central metabolic enzymes were comparatively less affected than other qualities that depend directly on energy status (e.g. motility, DNA repair). The overall catalytic vigour of the mutant decreased to < 20% than the wild-type strain, as estimated from the specific growth rate of cells carrying the catabolic TOL plasmid pWW0 for m-xylene biodegradation. Several loss-of-function phenotypes could be traced to the effect of the Δhfq deletion on the intracellular contents of the stationary sigma factor RpoS. It thus seems that Hfq, while not indispensable for any essential function, contributes to shape the environmental lifestyle of P. putida.


ChemBioChem | 2013

Towards functional orthogonalisation of protein complexes: individualisation of GroEL monomers leads to distinct quasihomogeneous single rings.

Sonja Billerbeck; Belén Calles; Christian L. Müller; Víctor de Lorenzo; Sven Panke

The essential molecular chaperonin GroEL is an example of a functionally highly versatile cellular machine with a wide variety of in vitro applications ranging from protein folding to drug release. Directed evolution of new functions for GroEL is considered difficult, due to its structure as a complex homomultimeric double ring and the absence of obvious molecular engineering strategies. In order to investigate the potential to establish an orthogonal GroEL system in Escherichia coli, which might serve as a basis for GroEL evolution, we first successfully individualised groEL genes by inserting different functional peptide tags into a robustly permissive site identified by transposon mutagenesis. These peptides allowed fundamental aspects of the intracellular GroEL complex stoichiometry to be studied and revealed that GroEL single‐ring complexes, which assembled in the presence of several functionally equivalent but biochemically distinct monomers, each consist almost exclusively of only one type of monomer. At least in the case of GroEL, individualisation of monomers thus leads to individualisation of homomultimeric protein complexes, effectively providing the prerequisites for evolving an orthogonal intracellular GroEL folding machine.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

The Standard European Vector Architecture (SEVA): a coherent platform for the analysis and deployment of complex prokaryotic phenotypes

Rafael Silva-Rocha; Esteban Martínez-García; Belén Calles; Max Chavarría; Alejandro Arce-Rodríguez; Aitor de las Heras; A. David Páez-Espino; Gonzalo Durante-Rodríguez; Juhyun Kim; Pablo I. Nikel; Raúl Platero; Víctor de Lorenzo


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1998

Binding of phage Φ29 protein p4 to the early A2c promoter: recruitment of a repressor by the RNA polymerase

María Monsalve; Belén Calles; Mario Mencía; Fernando Rojo; Margarita Salas


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2013

Expanding the Boolean logic of the prokaryotic transcription factor XylR by functionalization of permissive sites with a protease-target sequence

Belén Calles; Víctor de Lorenzo

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Víctor de Lorenzo

Spanish National Research Council

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Alejandro Arce-Rodríguez

Spanish National Research Council

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Fernando Rojo

Spanish National Research Council

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Margarita Salas

Spanish National Research Council

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María Monsalve

Spanish National Research Council

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Pablo I. Nikel

Spanish National Research Council

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Esteban Martínez-García

Spanish National Research Council

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Gonzalo Durante-Rodríguez

Spanish National Research Council

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Mario Mencía

Spanish National Research Council

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Raúl Platero

Spanish National Research Council

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